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Inside This Weekend's Wild Sundance Parties [Photos]

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Sundance Party

Sure, Sundance is a festival showcasing upcoming independent films, but since it began in 1978, the festival has taken a turn.

In addition to film premieres and panels, the people are there to party.

For ten days every January, the pristine, small mountain town usually known as Park City, Utah, becomes a playground for Hollywood elite.

Paris Hilton, Nicole Kidman, Jessica Biel, James Franco and Joseph Gordon-Levitt are just a few of the names who made it to this year's annual festival.

But when they weren't promoting their films, celebrities (and wannabes) were partying until the wee morning hours at one of the many pop-up restaurants, lounges or nightclubs.

Moet champagne was being served by ice luge and in goblets at the Paige Hospitality group football playoff viewing party.



The event was sponsored by Element Electronics.

Where on Sunday the Paige Hospitality group threw a football playoff viewing party sponsored by Element Electronics.



Guests were thoroughly enjoying themselves.



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Beyoncé Forced The Marine Corps Band To Fake It Too

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President's Own Marine Band

So not only did Beyoncé lip sync her performance, but she essentially forced the Marine Corps band to pretend to be playing their instruments.

Kristin DuBois, a spokesperson for the band, said "the Marine Band did perform live throughout the ceremony but we received last-minute word that Beyoncé wanted to use the recording.”

Jessica Chasmar of the Washington Times writes:

The Marine Corps Band has confirmed that it, along with Beyonce Knowles, faked Monday’s national anthem at President Obama’s second Inaugural. Band director Colonel Michael J. Colburn conducted the Star-Spangled Banner energetically, but the band members were actually mimicking blowing into their instruments.

Air guitars anyone? Nothing like a bunch of U.S. Marines pantomiming the country's anthem at the president's inauguration. (Though, interestingly, some would argue that The President's Own are just a bunch lip syncers themselves — they don't go to boot camp, don't deploy, but they still wear the uniform rather smartly.)

The New York Times reports that Beyoncé recorded the song in a studio at the Marine Barracks Annex on Sunday night, using tracks already laid down by the Marine Band.

Except for this brief departure into a pre-recorded track, Dubois insists that the rest of the performance was live.

Yet the faux music was the cherry on top of an otherwise hollow performance all around. The president's own inauguration was, in effect, a 'lip sync,' since he was officially inaugurated in front of Chief Supreme Court Justice John Roberts days earlier.

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Donald Trump Is Trying To Buy The New York Times (Seriously) (NYT)

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Donald Trump

Try not to laugh, but Donald Trump is exploring how he could buy the New York Times, Joe Hagan at New York Magazine reports:

According to sources familiar with the situation, Trump has engaged in more than one meeting to discuss how he might buy the Grey Lady. Details of Trump’s strategy remain scant.

Hagan notes that it's highly unlikely the Sulzberger family, which controls the New York Times would ever sell to Trump.

Trump has some sense of timing! A few years ago the Times was really getting knocked around. If he was serious about mounting a bid, that was the time to do it. Today, the Times, while not perfect, is in much better shape.

We have no idea how serious Trump is about his interest in the New York Times. For his sake, we hope it's not too serious. Because it will be a very expensive endeavor that goes nowhere.

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The 24 Worst Celebrity Air Rage Incidents

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Alec Baldwin

Celebrities are just like the rest of us, even when they travel, right?

After all, nobody likes the hassles of the airport: taking off your shoes, figuring out the latest baggage rules, or shooing away the paparazzi when you’re just trying to buy a magazine or some M&Ms before your flight.

Okay, so perhaps celebrities have it worse — in some ways — when negotiating their way through air travel.

On the other hand, famous folks also have a colorful track record of freaking out both in airports and while cruising at 30,000 feet.

See the shocking incidents >

Countless news reports detail some celebrity air rage incidents that many of us can relate to: Naomi Campbell went ballistic when her luggage got lost. And Clay Aiken got into a “dispute” with a fellow traveler when his in-flight nap invaded her personal space.

Other incidents get a little more extreme. Actor Alec Baldwin infamously lost his patience — slamming the bathroom door, pounding on the wall, cursing — when asked to quit playing Words With Friends on his phone. Icelandic singer Björk lashed out at a reporter in a Thai airport just for welcoming her to the country. And a near riot took place at London’s Heathrow after Snoop Dogg and some of his entourage were asked to leave a business-class lounge — and almost took down a duty-free shop with them.

The term “air rage” can be applied to anything from smoking onboard a plane to assaulting the flight crew. Andrew Thomas, a professor of international business at University of Akron, founder of Air Rage.org, and author of the book Air Rage: Crisis in the Skies, says that famous people have a higher likelihood of air rage, in large part because they tend to sit closer to the cockpit.

“There is an entitlement factor that goes with folks in the front of the plane, and I would extend that to celebrities as well,” he says. “There is a disproportionate number of air rage incidents that take place in business class — people who are not always used to the answer ‘no.’ ”

The FAA and Department of Homeland Security both monitor air rage incidents on U.S. flights, but they don’t strictly track it on all levels. Security breaches, meanwhile, are reported to the Department of Homeland Security. Technically, the FBI has jurisdiction over airspace, which is why anyone who breaks the rules by “interfering with the flight crew” will often be met by an FBI agent, rather than airport or local police, for questioning upon landing.

An Air Transport Association spokesman says that the airline industry group doesn’t track air rage at all, but that, “anecdotally, the number of unruly incidents, relative to the total number of travelers, is minuscule. Flight attendants do an excellent and commendable job at diffusing the potential for rage onboard.”

Interestingly enough, a striking number of celebrity air rage incidents involve London’s Heathrow Airport. Thomas speculates that the Heathrow problem stems from the fact that it’s the most-traveled international hub — and, perhaps, because of its easy access to the main trigger of in-flight rage: booze. “They really push the duty-free stuff at Heathrow,” he says, “so a lot of people buy their own stuff and carry it on the plane.”

But, for PR reasons, airlines don’t report the vast majority of incidents, unless there’s an extreme case requiring legal action. “The airlines’ unstated policy,” Thomas says, “is to get this passenger the hell out of here — and then let it go.”

Now see the celebrity in-flight incidents >

More From Travel + Leisure:

Susan Boyle

British singing sensation Susan Boyle startled passengers in a VIP lounge at London’s Heathrow Airport with erratic behavior, shouting curse words and singing into a mop.

One witness told the Sun: “She was singing and dancing around, shouting obscenities at full volume.” However, another onlooker told IrishCentral.com that the story was blown out of context. According to that witness, someone asked Boyle to sing and she complied.

But when an irritated flier made a snide comment, she grabbed hold of the mop saying she could sing if she wanted and added, “Oh, excuse me, sir, let me shine your shoes” and used the mop to shine his shoes.

Consequences: A British Airways official stayed with Boyle in a corridor until she boarded the Chicago-bound flight (Boyle was to appear on Oprah in January 2010). British Airways later released a statement: “A customer in the BA lounge on Tuesday was asked to temper their behavior as it was becoming disruptive.”



Billie Joe Armstrong

In September 2011, just before takeoff from San Francisco International Airport, a Southwest Airlines flight attendant asked the Green Day lead singer to pull up his low-sagging pants. According to reports, Armstrong replied: “Don’t you have better things to do than worry about that?” After repeated requests, he became very angry. The flight attendant said, “Pull your pants up or you’re getting off the plane.”

Consequences: Armstrong and his traveling companion were thrown off the Burbank-bound flight. He then Tweeted, “Just got kicked off a southwest flight because my pants sagged too low!” The airline apologized and put him on the next flight out.



Wes Scantlin

“When a grown man cannot purchase a beer on a five-hour flight from Boston to LA, then the airlines are completely losing their minds,” Puddle of Mud lead singer Wes Scantlin told TMZ.

He insisted that he was completely sober and had only wanted to purchase a beer after a two-hour nap on a JetBlue flight he took in September 2012. Officials, however, claim that the rocker was so drunkenly combative and argumentative that his unruly behavior created a public disturbance. When he was denied the drink, Scantlin and a flight attendant got into a verbal altercation and caused the plane to make an emergency landing in Austin, TX.

Consequences: Scantlin was booted off the flight, arrested, and charged with public intoxication. The other passengers each received a letter of apology and a $50 voucher for being grounded for more than an hour in Austin. However, the judge since dropped the charges due to insufficient evidence.



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This Woman Has Raked In Nearly $500K By Impersonating Britney Spears

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michaela weeks britney spears look-alike

Some are blessed with the come-hither eyes and powerful voice boxes to become global pop sensations.

Others are blessed with facial features uncannily like global pop sensations — like Michaela Weeks, who has earned 300,000 pounds ($483,000) as a Britney Spears impersonator, reports British newspaper, The Sun.

Like Spears, Michaela started her performing career at age 16, when she entered a look-alike competition.

The 24-year-old former waitress lost, the newspaper says, but was invited back the following year — when she won her category, and was soon signed to several agencies and performing a tribute act around the world.

Michaela landed in a music video last year for British indie band The Kaiser Chiefs (alongside Lady Gaga and Beyonce impersonators), and in 2010, even graced the official website of the real Spears, when she was selected among other look-alikes for a special on Fuse TV network.

"I bought my first house when I was 19," Michaela told The Sun. "I couldn't believe how well paid just looking like someone else was, and even now I imagine how different my life would have been if Britney had never made it. Being a lookalike has allowed me to spend tens of thousands on sports cars, two houses, clothes, shoes and my pedigree chihuahua, Charlie."

But just as you can get rich off resembling a beloved celebrity, your fortunes can founder when that celebrity stops being so beloved. 2007 was a bad year for Britney (a few stints in rehab, a shaved head, a custody battle, a child abuse investigation, and a dazed performance at the MTV Video Music Awards), so it was a bad year for those who make money off her stardom.

Michaela told The Sun that she was forced to sell her sports car, fell behind on her mortgage, and went through a winter without heat. But thankfully business picked up with the release of Spears' album "Circus" in 2010. And sometimes bad news for Spears is actually a blessing for Michaela — like when Spears stops working out and gains weight, so Michaela can "slack off a bit and enjoy snacking."

Ron Bartels, owner of Lookalikes-USA, who's been in the impersonator business for 28 years, is surprised that Michaela is getting much work at all. He says that he gets just one or two Britney Spears requests a year, when it used to be between 30 and 50.

Bartels once had a Spears impersonator whom he booked across Asia and Europe, but even then she was earning just $20,000-a-year — a nice salary supplement for a woman who waitressed as her day job.

But a couple of Spears impersonators have made headlines in recent years, such as Derrick Barry, who made Sharon Osbourne squeal in 2008 when he performed "I'm a Slave 4 U" in drag on "America's Got Talent," and Lorna Bliss, who gyrated on the "X Factor" judges' table in September in a fishnet body stocking.

A professional resembler also has better prospects across the Atlantic, Bartels points out. "England has a really huge lookalike market. It's a real fad over there, the doppelgangers," he says. "I don't know why, but it is."

One former British waitress, for example, now fetches $1,000 an hour for her resemblance to Kate Middleton.

Presidential impersonators are the real cash cows, Bartels has found, because they have guaranteed mega-fame for at least four years and get more play with big budget corporations, as opposed to bar mitzvahs. Bartels had a Bill Clinton look-alike who pulled in $2.5 million over a year and a half.

Weeks would likely see a big spike in demand, though, if Spears were to (pop gods forbid!) prematurely die. Michael Jackson and Frank Sinatra look-alikes saw their bookings multiply by three, four and even five times after those pop icons departed, according to Bartels. But sometimes a tragic death is bad for business (just ask any one-time impersonator of Dale Earnhardt or Princess Diana).

Even if requests for solo Spears acts are minimal in the U.S., she does get some play when customers request whole groups, say Bartels. Groups like "famous pretty blondes" or "famous in the 90s."

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10 Celebrities Who Spend Less Than You'd Expect On Vacation

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Jessica Alba

Justin and Jessica in Italy! Gwyneth in Spain! The Kardashians in Bora Bora!

It seems impossible to open up a magazine or pull up an entertainment website without being bombarded with pictures of celebrities enjoying luxurious vacations.

It’s enough to give you a major case of travel envy.

Here at Hopper we wanted to dig deeper into celebrity vacation statistics to find out just how big a dent these mega-trips make in celebrities bank accounts.

According to a recent American Express survey, American households planned to spend about $1,200 per person on summer vacations this year.

That translates to an estimated five to seven percent of income dedicated to vacationing.

How do A-list celebrities’ compare to the average American family when it comes to their trips?

Read more from Hopper's Blog:

Celebrity Travel: Kardashian Vakation Hot Spots

Hawaii Travel Snapshot

Bora Bora Travel Snapshot

Paris Travel Snapshot

The Kardashians

Where: Dominican Republic
Hotel: Casa De Campo
How Much: $22,575 (estimated)
Income: $65 million
% of Annual Income: 0.03%

The Kardashians know how to vacation, descending en masse on luxury resorts from Bora Bora to Mexico. This year they hoofed it to the Dominican Republic, enjoying a few days at Casa De Campo, a 7,000 acre resort with stunning tropical vistas and interior design by none other than Oscar De La Renta. Villas here don’t come cheap, but a standard room can start at around $250 dollars a night.



Jessica Alba

Where: Amalfi, Italy
Hotel: Hotel Santa Caterina
How Much: $57,770 (estimated)
Income in 2011: $9 million
% of Annual Income: 0.64%

Jessica Alba and her family enjoyed the Mediterranean beauty and architecture of Amalfi, Italy this summer. The picturesque Italian town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, noted for its distinctive medieval architecture with strong  Byzantine influences. Alba, Honor and Haven luxuriated in style at the Hotel Santa Catarina, a 19th century seaside palazzo turned into a 5 star hotel.



Britney Spears

Where: Maui, Hawaii
Hotel: Grand Wailea
How Much: $28, 750 (estimated)
Income: $10 million
% of Annual Income: 0.29%

Britney Spears, her two sons and fiance jetted to Maui, Hawaii for the 4th of July. There they relaxed poolside at the Grand Wailea, a Waldorf Astoria resort on 40 acres of beachfront property. The grounds here are impeccable (and kid friendly!) with activity pools boasting water slides, rapids, and the world’s first water elevator.



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'Gangnam Style' Has Brought In $8 Million In Ad Revenue For YouTube

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psy gangnam style 1 billion

Google said the YouTube page showcasing the "Gangnam Style" video by South Korean rapper Psy has reaped more than $8 million in ad revenue.

Google Chief Business Officer Nikesh Arora revealed the figure Tuesday while discussing the money-making potential of YouTube during a quarterly earnings call with financial analysts.

Ad revenue from popular YouTube videos is shared with creators of the content.

In December, "Gangnam Style" became the first video to break a billion views on YouTube, marking a historic milestone on the Internet.

A counter at the YouTube page showed that the music video has been watched more than 1.23 billion times since it was uploaded in July of last year.

Kevin Allocca, YouTube's trends manager, attributed Psy's success "to the universal appeal of catchy music -- and er, great equine dance moves."

"Gangnam" is estimated to have earned the rapper millions more from digital downloads, advertising deals and on-demand services.

The song -- which refers to a trendy Seoul district -- spawned a mini tribute video industry, complete with copycats.

The quirky star, whose real name is Park Jae-Sang, won adulation in his homeland for the global hit and was awarded one of South Korea's highest cultural honors, the Okgwan Order of Cultural Merit.

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Original 'Star Wars' Poster Artist May Return For The New Films

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While we may not know the plot, who's directing, or what the newest installment of "Star Wars" is about,  there is one reason to get excited for the new film. 

Disney has contacted Drew Struzan to return to work on artwork for the new films. 

If the name Struzan doesn't ring a bell, you're definitely familiar with his art. (After all, he painted posters for the first six "Star Wars" films.)

drew struzan Star Wars

empire strikes back drew struzan

return of the jedi drew struzan

Struzan told website Fanhattan it's not a definite he'll return, but there's always the possibility. 

"I spent 35 years painting 'Star Wars'. I painted 'Star Wars' before most of you were born! But I guess there is always a chance," said Struzan. "If the opportunity arises, it will be a real temptation. But it’s going to have to be a real temptation to get me away from my wife and my little grandkids and my family." 

Check out more of Struzan's work on his website.

SEE ALSO: Abraham Lincoln's real watch was used in the Oscar-nominated film > 

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Samuel L. Jackson Sings Taylor Swift's 'We Are Never Getting Back Together' — Here's Today's Buzz

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Mila Kunis

SEE ALSO: Go inside this weekend's wildest Sundance parties >

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HBO Wasn't 'Crazy In Love' With Beyoncé Co-Directing Her Documentary

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beyonce hbo documentary

Next month after Beyoncé's Super Bowl halftime show, the singer will appear on HBO in a documentary "Life is but a Dream," which she co-directed. 

However, the network wasn't always sold on the idea of Beyoncé being so hands on with the project. 

In an excerpt that didn't make the January issue of GQ, HBO's programming president, Michael Lombardo, revealed he wasn't crazy about Beyonce's agents pitching the singer as co-director. 

"My first response to myself was, 'Okay, that doesn't sound like something we normally would do. It sounds a little bit like it's probably going to be a fluff piece,'" said Lombardo. "We have a long history at HBO in the documentary world and in the music world, and, the notion of any person of note being responsible for the editorial choices in a story about themselves is something I approach with some degree of cynicism." 

After watching the entire 90 minutes, Lombardo knew it was the right decision.

"You feel ... that vulnerability of someone searching for the comfort place where they're willing to be more than the image that has been fed to us—I was incredibly moved by that," Lombardo told GQ. "I dare anybody to tune in and turn it off."

"Life Is But A Dream" premieres Sunday, February 16 at 9 p.m. on HBO.

SEE ALSO: Beyoncé lip-synched the National Anthem at the president's Inauguration >

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JENNIFER LOPEZ: All Performers Lip-Synch

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jennifer lopez the daily showJennifer Lopez was on "The Daily Show" last night to promote her new film "Parker," and the conversation quickly turned to Beyoncé's lip-synch controversy. 

Jon Stewart asked the singer/actress whether its considered an acceptable thing to do in the business. 

"Sometimes it happens," said Lopez. "When you're in certain stadiums and in certain venues and stuff, they do pre-record things because you're gonna have that terrible slapback." 

Lopez then recounted how Whitney Houston lip-synched the National Anthem at the '91 Super Bowl. 

"All performers do have to do it at some point," said Lopez. 

Watch the interview below:

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Kate Middleton Portrait Artist Lashes Out Against 'Vicious' Criticism

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kate middleton

When artist Paul Emsley unveiled his official portrait of Kate Middleton, the world was surprised to see the beautiful Duchess of Cambridge's not as attractive painting.

The press was somewhat harsh, calling Middleton's first official portrait "ghostly" and "an aesthetic disaster."

There have even been countless internet memes dedicated to making fun of the portrait >

But now, for the first time since the much-hyped portrait's unveiling, the 65-year-old artist is speaking out against what he calls were "vicious" criticisms.

"Some of the words written about it were so personal. I'd be inhuman if I said it didn't affect me," the award-winning artist told Hello! "When you take on commissions like this, it is hazardous and you expect a bit of flak, but I expected nothing like the criticism I have received. I didn't expect it to go to the levels it did."

While Prince William described the piece as "absolutely beautiful” and Middleton herself said it was "amazing" and "brilliant," Emsley said the backlash was like a "witch hunt" and "circus" that took an emotional toll on his two daughters and his wife.

"At first the attacks were so vicious that there was a point where I myself doubted that the portrait of the duchess was any good. But now I've had time to reflect, I am still happy with it and am getting on with my life. There is nothing I would have changed," said Emsley, who spent four months on the portrait.

But Emsley says that perhaps his painting just isn't photographing well, and he suggests you visit it in the U.K.'s National Portrait Gallery before knocking his work.

After sitting for Emsley on two occasions, in May and June of last year, the artist says of his royal subject:

"She struck me as enormously open and generous and a very warm person. After initially feeling it was going to be an unsmiling portrait, I think it was the right choice in the end to have her smiling—that is really who she is."

SEE ALSO: The first official portrait of Kate Middleton is ... interesting >

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Here's The One Thing We Know About The Return Of 'Mad Men'

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Jon Hamm Don Draper Mad Men

AMC's critically acclaimed "Mad Men" is set to return for a sixth season Sunday, April 7 for a two-hour premiere.

While the notoriously tight-lipped creator Matthew Weiner is keeping almost everything about the season under lock and key, he did reveal to journalists that "the show will be advancing in time. I can't say how much. It will be more than a week."

The studio-requested two-hour premiere will also clear up some of season five's biggest mysteries: Does Don go back to his cheating ways? Does Peggy make it at a rival firm? Has Roger Sterling fully embraced the hallucinogenic lifestyle?

"It will answer a lot of questions of where we left off last year," Weiner said. "I'm really very proud of its mood."

SEE ALSO: These Are Twitter's Early Sketches For Its Logo — And They're Really Bizarre

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Trump's Right Hand Man: 'Mr. Trump Is So Smart And So Rich That If He Wants The NYT, He Will Get It'

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Donald Trump

Yesterday we wrote about a report that Donald Trump was exploring how he could potentially buy the New York Times.

We called the idea laughable, and suggested that he would just burn money in a futile effort to buy the paper. The Sulzbergers, who control the company, are extremely unlikely to sell the paper. And if Trump did somehow wrest it from their control, there would be a mass exodus of reporters.

This morning, someone from Trump's organization got in touch. He disagrees with our assessment.

Michael Cohen, Executive Vice President and Special Counsel to Trump, wrote to say that if Trump really wants it, he'll get it.

"I have watched Mr. Trump over the years navigate much tougher acquisitions," wrote Cohen, "Mr. Trump is so smart and so rich that if he wants it, he will get it. If Mr. Trump elects to purchase the NY Times, commits his time and resources, there is nothing he can’t buy."

We emailed him back asking if Trump was truly interested in Times or not. At the time of publishing this post, we had not heard back. If he responds, we will update.

On Twitter, Trump seemed to suggest he wasn't interested in the Times, saying, "When the New York Times sold their beautiful, long-time building for peanuts & the buyer flipped it for a massive profit—they lost me!"

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6 Ways Hollywood Is Cashing In On Lance Armstrong's Downfall

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oprah lance armstrongFollowing Lance Armstrong's much-hyped doping confession to Oprah Winfrey last week, Hollywood is cashing in on the cyclist's downfall by buying up numerous film, TV and book projects about the seven-time Tour de France winner.

Since the OWN interview on January 17 drew 3.2 million viewers, here's what Hollywood projects are already in the works, according to The Hollywood Reporter:

  • Paramount and J.J. Abrams' Bad Robot acquired the rights to New York Times sportswriter Juliet Macur's forthcoming book "Cycle of Lies: The Fall of Lance Armstrong." The book, for which HarperCollins reportedly paid a six-figure advance, doesn't even hit shelves until June.
  • Bradley Cooper wants to play Lance Armstrong in a movie. “I remember Matt Damon was going to do his autobiography at one point years ago,” Cooper said in an interview with the BBC. “I remember thinking, that would be a great character, I’d love to play that character. I would love to do something, I think he’s pretty fascinating.”
  • British sportswriter David Walsh, who has been tracking Armstrong's doping since the late '90s, will publish "Seven Deadly Sins" later this month. Armstrong once called the writer "the worst journalist I know" and a "f---ing troll."
  • A documentary from Oscar winner Alex Gibney which promises to address the "huge story" of the doping allegations, and he expects Armstrong to cooperate. After several delays with the film due to the allegations of recent years, the film is now on the fast track to being finished. Originally titled "The Road Back," the doc's name will now likely change.
  • Armstrong may write a book himself, but between all of the lawsuits and investigations, it may be a while before that happens.
  • If Armstrong does write a tell-all, you can bet the rights to that book will be snatched up by Hollywood almost immediately.

SEE ALSO: Celebrities react to Lance Armstrong's confession >

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Amy Poehler Stars In Best Buy's Super Bowl Ad [FIRST PHOTOS]

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amy poehler best buy super bowl

Best Buy just revealed that "Parks and Recreation" star Amy Poehler will headline it's third consecutive Super Bowl ad.

"Amy Poehler's Golden Globe performance left us all wanting to see more of her. We are thrilled to feature her in our commercial this year and bring the public another dose of her unparalleled humor," said Scott Durchslag, Best Buy's senior vice president of Digital and Marketing. "We know people have high expectations for these ads, and Amy delivers a whole new dimension of entertainment.

While Poehler will certainly make the company seem funny — Durchslag told the Associated Press that "she had a lot of creative control" — will she be able to save it?

Best Buy lost a reported $10 million Q3 2012. But the company has a new CEO who wants to turn things around.

The 30-second spot, created by CP+B and directed by Academy Award nominee Bryan Buckley, aims to spread a simple message.

"Amy is this comedic every person who can make things simple," Durchslag said. "And Best Buy is trying to accomplish the same thing — make technology simple." Specifics are yet to be revealed.

Last year Best Buy focused on tech innovators like Instagram founder Kevin Systrom and the year before it went for the wow factor with celebrities like Ozzy Osbourne and Justin Bieber.

Perhaps Poehler is a happy medium.

Here are pictures of Poehler on set:amy poehler best buy super bowl

The plot hasn't been revealed, but you can see some dialogue on the screen:amy poehler best buy super bowl

SEE ALSO: Here's The One Thing We Know About The Return Of 'Mad Men'

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'Blade Runner' Or Beijing?

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Air pollution levels in the Chinese capital of Beijing have hit hazardous levels. It's both scary to breathe in and to look at.

Several people have pointed out that an eerie of photo of Beijing shrouded in a dense smog with a video running on the side of a building looks like a scene from the 1982 science fiction movie "Blade Runner." 

"Blade Runner" is a neo-noir film starring Harrison Ford. It takes place in the future city of Los Angeles, 2019, where it is perpetually dark and rainy. 

What do you think?

Here's the photo of Beijing:

Beijing Smog

And here's a screengrab from "Blade Runner":

Blade Runner

SEE ALSO: This Old Picture Of Manhattan Smog Looks Just Like Beijing Today

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The Voice Of Charlie Brown Arrested For Stalking

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charlie brown christmas

The man who voiced Charlie Brown on holiday TV specials has been arrested for stalking.  

56-year-old Peter Robbins was apprehended Sunday evening at a border crossing between San Diego and Tijuana, Mexico according to the U-T San Diego. 

Robbins was reportedly wanted by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department for a felony warrant. 

Information on San Diego County Jail's website says Robbins faces five felonies which include stalking and making a threat of death or bodily harm to another.

Robbins' bail is set at $550,000. He awaits a hearing Wednesday morning. 

As a child, Robbins voiced the iconic "Peanuts" character through the '60s in cartoons including "A Charlie Brown Christmas" and "It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown."

SEE ALSO: 6 new Hollywood projects inspired by Lance Armstrong's doping confession >

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The Governor's Got His Eye On The Group In A New 'Walking Dead' Promo

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We're just a few weeks away from the return of "The Walking Dead," and while we've seen a few teasers and posters, this new TV promo offers a better sneak peak inside the Governor's impending plan to take the prison and tough decisions that lie ahead for Rick. 

The trailer also makes it look more evident that Andrea is aligned closely with The Governor, but is she really? 

"The Walking Dead" returns February 10. 

SEE ALSO: The ominous teaser poster for "The Walking Dead" that previews a showdown between Rick and The Governor >

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Doctor's Murder Inspires Documentary About Late-Term Abortions

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after tiller abortion documentary

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Third-trimester abortions — those done beyond the 28th week of pregnancy — account for less than 1 percent of all abortions performed in the United States each year. Only four doctors nationwide offer the procedure.

Their stories and those of their patients are told in "After Tiller," a documentary in competition at the Sundance Film Festival.

Filmmakers Lana Wilson and Martha Shane were inspired to examine the issue after the 2009 murder of Dr. George Tiller, a colleague of the doctors featured in the film.

"Our generation has really been alienated from the abortion debate in a lot of ways," said Shane, 29. "It's become a shouting match in this country and extremely polarized, so this was a chance to take a really new approach to the issue and to focus on the intimate situations and the people who are working at the center of the storm," she said.

Doctors Susan Robinson and LeRoy Carhart came to Sundance (with security) to discuss their participation in the film. They opened up their clinics and their homes to the filmmakers in an effort to diminish misconceptions about their work and their patients.

"One of the worst misconceptions is that women make the decision to have an abortion lightly and frivolously," Robinson said. "But, actually, it turns out women are adult moral agents, just like everybody else, and they are capable of wrestling with very complex ethical issues that only they have all the pieces to."

The filmmakers acknowledge that even those in favor of abortion rights often don't support or understand third-trimester abortions. Shane and Wilson themselves didn't know much about the issue before beginning work on their film three years ago. What would motivate a woman to seek an abortion so late in her pregnancy? What would motivate physicians to perform a procedure that leads them to be vilified daily by protesters?

"One of the things that most surprised us about getting to know (the doctors) is they're not political zealots," Wilson said. "They have very complicated feelings on this subject. They struggle with a lot of the moral and ethical complexities in doing this work every single day."

One of the doctors featured in the film said she sees the aborted infants as babies, not fetuses or clumps of cells. But the baby is inside the woman, "and she can't handle it," the doctor said, for what she described as "a variety of desperate reasons."

"First and foremost, they're doctors. They're not politicians," Shane said. "Their goal is to care for their patients who are going through one of the most difficult things a woman can go through, so that's where their dedication comes from."

The film shares the stories of several patients undergoing third-trimester abortions. Most elected to have the procedure after learning of severe fetal anomalies that would prevent their babies from living healthy lives. In such cases, the pregnancies were planned and the parents hold funerals for their stillborn infants.

One young patient, a college student, was raped and in denial about her pregnancy for months. Another spent several months saving up for an abortion, and by the time she had the money, she was more than 28 weeks pregnant.

The film shows how women often ponder their decision "for days, for weeks, some of them for months trying to get help and not being able to find it," said Carhart, a Vietnam veteran who has been providing abortions since the late 1980s.

The film also includes the protesters who regularly march and chant outside these doctors' offices and offers their arguments against the procedure.

"Abortion is not a public policy," Carhart said. "(Opponents) are using abortion for political purpose, and it's not for the betterment of the people in this country."

Shane and Wilson said they hope their film humanizes the doctors and offers a sense of "the wide-ranging circumstances" that motivate women to choose third-trimester abortions.

Wilson said viewers opposed to abortion might be "really surprised about some of these people's circumstances, especially fetal-anomaly patients, and really have to think, 'Should we be having these blanket laws applying to everyone?'"

Robinson hopes the film makes abortion easier to understand and accept — and ultimately guarantees its accessibility.

"I hope that it will make it clear to viewers that this is a very complex topic and women consider these issues very deeply," she said. "I hope that it will help de-stigmatize the whole issue of abortion so that it's a little less cloaked in secrecy and shame. It needs to stay legal. It needs to stay safe and it needs to come out of the shadows."

 

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